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Displaying results 401 - 500 of 794

NAMTA Quarterly 11/1 04 Education as Peace

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Professor Moritaki and Mr. Takahashi but they were more than puzzled to know what they could do to change what they saw as the…
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A second strategy open to the copywriter - and this is particularly useful for what might be called "luxuries&…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/1 06 Commitment to Peace

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COMMITMENT TO PEACE by Renilde Montessori Reni/de Montessori's presentation integrates her personal, international…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/1 07 Lecture Closing the Congress (1937)

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Lecture aosing the Congress by Maria Montessori Montessori projects her own wish for a greater participation of the child in…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/2 04 Goodbye Montessori—A Personal Account

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II I The usefulness of Montessori training outside of the classroom was impressive in several ways. Ln my adjunct career as…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/2 05 Montessori Careers

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!I I children and trying to see what is universal in their revelations to us and what still requires more thought and study…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/2 06 Proposal—The Montessori Atrium

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Bambino, was formed to develop materials and to continue the study of the develop- ment of the religious potential in children…

NAMTA Quarterly 11/2 07 Interview with Hildegard Solzbacher

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Catholic girl's high school all at the same time. Next, 1 did all the planning, administrating, and teaching of a new…
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'What kind of a human being will I be todayr How will I affect others today?' It is these thoughts that explain why…

Readers Digest Montessori Article 1965 English

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house; it belongs to a friend of children.” Tt was signed with the communist emblem: the hammer and sickle. In country…

Readers Digest Montessori Article 1965 Spanish

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60 SELECCIONES DEL READER'S DIGEST emblema comunista de la hoz y el martillo. En un pais tras otro, la guerra cerr6…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 12, Number 1, 1986, Fall-Winter

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THE FARM EXPERIENCE: ITS IMPORTANCE IN A CHILD'S LIFE by Richard Barker Richard Barker's perceptive correlations…
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housing, feeding, reproduction and marketing management of poultry. This effort has immersed Dan, for an extended period, in…
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AN OVERVIEW OF ADOLESCENCE by Phil Gang The Origins of Adolescence Adolescence is viewed today as a period between puberty…
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Montessori explains that, "The teacher must have the greatest respect for the personality of the adolescent,…
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NAMTA WORKSHOPS PAST Muriel Dwyer-A Classic Montessorian Beyond all doubt, the over-enrolled Muriel Dwyer workshop indicated…
Sequence 100
MR. KAHN GOES TO AUSTRALIA Montessori Week-Sydney, Australia, November, 1986 "Based as it is on liberty, the…
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Their brand of Montessori is an act of educational reform. They are taking the Montessori ideal as a "whole system…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 12, Number 2, 1987, Winter-Spring

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the widening gulf between affluent and improverished people, and the diversion of societal resources to military expenditures…
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With the move into the low income populations Montesserians will be able to address an oft voiced criticism of our work. Many…
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country's and state's histories. American leaders of the 19th century believed that no nation could survive, let…
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ONE WORLD, ONE DRUM by Tom Sipes My first teaching assignment was in a Catholic seminary in East Africa, in the town of…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 13, Number 1, 1987, Fall-Winter

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Dwye1·: Well, yes of course it does relate to being able to decode; some call that reading, although it is only a small part…
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is to develop the interest of the child, and the pedagogical basis of the whole school is the developmental needs of the child…
Sequence 126
EDITORIAL: AMI MONTESSORI: BACK TO THE FUTURE By David Kahn We are in the turmoil of becoming. And as one undergoes the…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 13, Number 2, 1988, Spring

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misunderstood by non-professionals who view evolution as a simple ladder of progress, and therefore expect a linear array of…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 14, Number 1, 1988, Fall-Winter

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l\flTCHELLELEMENTARYSCHOOL:A PROFILE SKETCH by Paula Biwer Paula Biwer chroni,cles the cwvelopment of Mitchell Montessori…
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The Montessorian, in reading Socrates' Theaet,et:us, may begin to describe the Montessori vision with new vocabulary and…
Sequence 74
New Montessori Scholarship__; THE ACQUISITION OF SPOKEN LANGUAGE THE NEBULA HYPOTHESIS by Annette Haines ThefoUowi:ng two…
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society. "Rituals are considered to represent only a negative dead- weight from the past." Margaret Mead…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 14, Number 2, 1989, Winter-Spring

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The Mainstreaming of Montessori in America The Humanities, Research, and the Modern Sciences Editorial Mainstreaming of…
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implementation and teacher training approaches. Lastly, this Journal introduces still another problem of Montessori…
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government should be constituted-as seriously as anyone I have read or met. His many volumes of correspondence are laced with…
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passes for an education in this day and time, but I am not deceived by it." She was deceived by very little; she was…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 15, Number 1, 1990, Fall-Winter

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wruch he is already a part. Then, by grasping that his interest in the events of home is akin to their own interests, they can…
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each of us might have something to learn. Often, those who proclaim themselves fit to make ethical pronouncements for the…
Sequence 41
progress had become very impo1tant in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Prior to that time people had thought more or…
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behavior by males is absolutely unknown in the animal kingdom except in chimps and humans. So if one is interested in the…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 15, Number 2, 1990, Spring

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can see it - North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia." As she named the continents her hand…
Sequence 101
mth regard w hominid evolution, apparently tlie sequential lineage of hominids i.s cmnpletely wrong; f<YUr very…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 16, Number 1, 1990, Fall-Winter

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are able to visualize any given lrnowledge. By 18 you have envisioned the whole universe. Then at 18 you decide what your…
Sequence 110
the Urban Education Goals, and the national Education Goals, all as hooks for our own efforts to put children first on the…
Sequence 116
salary and facility improvements; transition projects providing suppor- tive services to elementary school children and their…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 16, Number 2, 1991, Spring

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media acclaim, but was subsequently suppressed by American educators until Montessori schools all but disappeared by 1923.…
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tions of the social deficits education ought somehow co repair. Before then, cognitive issues had been in the foreground for a…
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alienated and the poor in our culture. All we can cite as success is the fact that a black middle class has moved out of the…
Sequence 78
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) has undenaken a comprehensive, long-term initiative to…
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• Enables all Americans to panicipate fully and intelligently in making sound personal, social, and political decisions…
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ioral sciences; mathematics, and technology, and the interrelationships among these fields. • Cares about high-quality…
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her clinical experience--if he or she had one, and if it was done well. These are big ifi. The kind of literacy that we are…
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the common experience for fashioning questions in the right way to reveal what they know, rather than just revealing…
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principal. Bue, they always say, regression co the mean-even if this happens, it won't lase. So they did regress co the…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 16, Number 3, 1991, Summer

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of President Wilson. Montessori lectured in cities in South America, and, of course, conducted many courses in India during…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 17, Number 2, 1992, Spring

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in the United States. With all educational levels currently operating in America, the year 2000 calls for the first…
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MONTESSORI 2000 MISSION T he United States of America is thirsting for bold, new education designs. The exponential knowledge…
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in America and abroad. It was a favorite early childhood curriculum of the "War on Poverty" of the sixties…
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Middle School Community: Montessori 2000 Expected Outcomes Participation in Montessori education is a character-building…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 18, Number 1, 1993, Winter

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educationalese all have a purpose. But in my estimation they represent exercises in minutiae-the kind of minutiae that…
Sequence 59
... he showed me a picture of the night sky taken with the big telescope. There were tens of thousands of stars and…
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teachers to work with administrators on a plan for released time distribution and an in-service schedule for the system.…
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children from their earliest entrance into the educational community will be accli- mated to the developmental possibilities…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 18, Number 2, 1993, Spring

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of my ·career was washing dishes with Bernard Shaw after a very large social gathering. Bernard Shaw's share of the…
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kitchen. Adding section by section, piece by piece, they discovered the style pattern and saw that the repeats in Malory are…
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English. So, English literature dropped. When you had a German-speaking ruler and a German-speaking court, it affected what…
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have been traced, and seventeen Robin Hoods. This snowballing happens because there are so few names. Even in England-…
Sequence 122
Some of the Native American tales preserve the original animal marriage, and some of the Japanese do. There is nothing…
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Schools cannot start too early to encourage the refinement of taste in children, to present for their learning the fine…
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eve'fythlng' turns on the na- ture of the habits, Including ha&its of language, we Jorm by accident and…
Sequence 166
Plln.osoPHY AND PRAcnCE: PRIMARY CONSIDERATIONS FOR TIIE IMPLEMENTATION OF AN ALL-DAY MONI'ESSORI PROGRAM Mary B.…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 18, Number 3, 1993, Summer

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THE AooLESCENT AND THE FUit.JRE by Margaret E. Stephenson Miss Stephenson presents adolescence in a definitive theorectl…
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Early Years of Exploration and Settlement in America I. Ideas to Investigate for Reports a. Europeans who reached North…
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2. To enable the students to trace their own ethnicity and ancestry and to grow in appreciation for the uniqueness and…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 19, Number 1, 1994, Winter

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An exceptional example of vertical history was the Columbus Quincentennary Exhibit at the National Gallery of Art nearly two…
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the millennia, centuries, half-centuries, and even decades. We can also see the sequence of these frameworks. Second, there is…
Sequence 62
Alexander the Great, another Greek, was also a great traveller, founding Alexandria in Egypt, and many other towns named…
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People came from the ends of the earth to live in Alexandria. Everyone entered through the Gate of the Sun and left through…
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opment guarantees the unfolding of basic "experience expectant" systems. Refinements of language, such as…
Sequence 139
We must have a conversation that stretches out across this nation and creates an advocacy for children that rejects all nay-…
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unpaid, or at best low paid, productive activities are systematically exploited. As the United Nations State of the World…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 19, Number 2, 1994, Spring

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were in a Catholic country, so it can be ascribed to the Catholic religion. But it happens in India, it happens in Africa, it…
Sequence 161
teaching, which are now standard fixtures in the early education scene in America. Dr. Montessori was strongly influenced by…
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the teacher must awaken the spirit of the child. They considered the moral preparation of the teacher to be the key to…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 20, Number 1, 1995, Winter

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organization-as well as with managing their behavior. It is more sur- prising to discover, in the writings of Russian…
Sequence 117
children will want to send their work out for publication. In our local newspaper, The St. Paul Pioneer Press, a segment of…
Sequence 180
a need for whole men. Every side of the human personality must function. A young person may have special aptitudes in some…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 20, Number 2, 1995, Spring

Sequence 27
LINKING THE FAMILY AND THE SCHOOL: THE IMPORTANCE OF p ARENTAL CHOICE IN ADMISSIONS by Sharon L. Dubble, PhD The Montessori…
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Assessment (1992, p. 7), and the future of testing in America depends on issues of equity and the improvement of opportunities…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 20, Number 3, 1995, Summer

Sequence 11
PART I MONTESSORI IN AMERICA SAN FRANCISCO, 1915 August, 1995, marks the 125th anniversary of Maria Montessori' s…
Sequence 14
these "deficient" children, in 1907 she took her new teaching prin- ciples to "normal"…
Sequence 66
The thought of so condemning greed and ambition seems alien for a society apparently rooted in greed and ambition, although…
Sequence 94
The idea Montessori is trying to get across is something so novel, so stupendous, that-as she herself says-she really needs a…
Sequence 101
another of a Euro-American provincialism, as though a majority of the world's population and their historical…
Sequence 102
that we are now faced with a crisis of global proportions. This situation takes the form of a crisis in energy, food, ecology…
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the abilities of children throughout the world. As early as 1910, she resigned her lectureship at the University of Rome,…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 21, Number 2, 1996, Spring

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The first reason has to do with scholarship based on the old model. Consider the recent book The Bell Curve (Herrnstein &…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 21, Number 3, 1996, Summer

Sequence 94
MONTESSORI: A CARING PEDAGOGY by Elizabeth Hall In this Montessori manifesto of caring, Ms. Hall puts forward the impor-…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 22, Number 1, 1997, Winter

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EDITORIAL: p ATHWAYS TO MATURITY by David Kahn As the new year is underway and we approach the twenty-first century with…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 22, Number 2, 1997, Spring

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To-day, however, I wish to speak of the adult and of man's psychological structure, as the child has revealed it to us.…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 23, Number 1, 1998, Winter

Sequence 26
that belief is there, all rewards and punishments could disappear and new ones would pop up like new Kleenexes in the box. I,…
Sequence 131
the same elements that you see in Montessori and Sylvia Ashton Warner. For example, in all of these approaches is a deep…

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